SOUND NOTES (1)
SOUND NOTES (1)
Introduction
Production of Sound
→ The energy required to make an object vibrate and produce sound is provided
by some outside source (like our hand, wind etc.).
Propagation of Sound
→ These vibrating air particles exert a force on nearby air particles so they are also
displaced from their rest position and start to vibrate.
→ This process is continued in the medium till sound reaches our ears.
→ The disturbance produced by sound travels through the medium (not the
particles of the medium).
• When a body vibrates then it compresses the air surrounding it and form a area of
high density called compression (C).
→ Compression is the part of wave in which particles of the medium are closer to
one another forming high pressure.
→ Rarefaction is the area of wave in which particles of the medium are further
apart from one another forming a low pressure or low density area.
→ When body vibrates back and forth, a series of compression and rarefaction is
formed in air resulting in sound wave.
• A wave in which the particles of the medium vibrate back and forth in the same
direction in which the wave is moving, is called a longitudinal wave.
→ When we push and pull the slinky compression (number of turns are more or
closer) and rarefaction (number of turns are less or farther) are formed.
→ When a wave travels along with slinky, its each turn moves back and forth by
only a small distance in the direction of wave. So the wave is longitudinal.
• When one end of a slinky is moved up and down rapidly whose other end is
fixed, it produces transverse wave.
→ This wave possess along the slinky in horizontal direction, while turns of slinky
(particles) vibrate up and down at right angle to the direction of wave.
→ Thus in transverse wave particles of the medium vibrate up and down at right
angles to the direction of wave.
→ Light waves are transverse waves but they don’t need a material
medium for propagation.
→ When a wave travel in air the density and pressure of air changes from their
mean position.
→ Compression is shown by crest while rarefaction is shown by trough.
Wavelength
Frequency
Time Period
Amplitude
→ The maximum displacement of the particle of the medium from their original
undisturbed position is called amplitude of the wave.
→ A woman’s voice is shrill having a high pitch while a man’s voice is flat having
low pitch.
→ High pitch sound has large number of compressions and rarefactions passing a
fixed point per unit time.
• Loudness: The loudness depends on the amplitude of the sound wave.
→ Loudness is the measure of the sound energy reaching the ear per sec.
→ Greater the amplitude of sound wave, greater is the energy, louder the sound;
short is the amplitude, less is the energy, soft is the sound.
• Quality or Timbre: The timbre of a sound depends on the shape of sound wave
produced by it. It is the characteristic of musical sound.
Velocity
• The distance travelled by a wave in one second is called velocity of the wave.
Reflection of Sound
→ Like light, sound also bounce back when it falls on a hard surface. It is called
reflection of sound.
(i) The incident sound wave, the reflected sound wave and normal at the point of
incidence lie in the same plane.
(ii) Angle of reflection of sound is always equal to the angle of incidence of sound.
Echo
• The repetition of sound caused by the reflection of sound waves is called an echo.
→ We can hear echo when there is a time gap of 0.1 second in original sound and
echo (reflected sound).
→ Echo is produced when sound reflected from a hard surface (i.e. brick wall,
mountain etc.) as soft surface tends to absorb sound.
Speed = Distance/Time
Here, Speed of sound in air = 344 ms-1 at 22ºC
Time = 0.1 second
344 = Distance/0.1 sec
⇒ Distance = 344 × 0.1 = 34.4 m
So, distance between reflecting surface and audience = 34.4/2 = 17.2 (at 22ºC).
Reverberation
• The persistence of sound in a big hall due to repeated reflection of sound from the
walls, ceiling and floor of the hall is called reverberation.
→ If reverberation is too long, sound becomes blurred, distorted and confusing due
to overlapping of different sound.
→ Panels made of felt or compressed fibre board are put on walls and ceiling to
absorb sound.
(i) Megaphone, loudspeakers, bulb horns and trumpets, shehnai etc. are designed to
send sound in a particular direction without spreading all around.
→ All these instruments have funnel tube which reflects sound waves repeatedly
towards audience. In this amplitude of sound waves adds up to increase loudness
of sound.
(ii) Stethoscope: It is a medical instrument used for listening the sounds produced
in human body mainly in heart and lungs. The sound of the heartbeats reaches the
doctor’s ears by the multiple reflection of the sound waves in the rubber tube of
stethoscope.
(iii) Sound Board: In big halls or auditoriums sound is absorbed by walls, ceiling,
seats etc. So a curved board (sound board) is placed behind the speakers so that his
speech can be heard easily by audiences. The soundboard works on the multiple
reflection of sound.
(iv) The ceiling of concert halls are made curved, so that sound after reflection
from ceiling, reaches all the parts of the hall.
Range of Hearing
(ii) The sounds of frequencies lower than 20 Hz are known as ‘infrasonic sounds’.
(iii) The sounds of frequencies higher than 20 KHz are known as ‘ultrasonic
waves’.
→ Dogs, parpoises, dolphins, bats and rats can hear ultrasonic sounds.
→ Bats and rats can produce ultrasonic sounds.
Hearing Aid
→ It is battery operated electronic device used by persons who are hard of hearing.
→ Microphone convert sound into electrical signals, than those are amplified by
amplifier. Amplified signals are send to the speaker of hearing aid. The speaker
converts the amplified signal to sound and sends to ear for clear hearing.
Applications of Ultrasound
(i) It is used to detect cracks in metal blocks in industries without damaging them.
(ii) It is used in industries to clean ‘hard to reach’ parts of objects such as spiral
tubes, odd shaped machines etc.
(iii) It is used to investigate the internal organs of human body such as liver, gall
bladder, kidneys, uterus and heart.
(iv) Ecocardiography: These waves are used to reflect the action of heart and its
images are formed. This technique is called echocardiography.
(vi) Ultrasound is used to split tiny stones in kidneys into fine grains.